this post was submitted on 14 Jul 2024
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People in the thread are telling you to use wood glue, and while this specific location would probably be fine, you should know that the rest of your guitar was assembled using hide glue for a very good reason.
Wood glue is very pliable and plastic in texture which is great for things like tables and chairs that are frequently being flexed as loads are applied and removed. The trade off is that the glue joints absorb vibration, which is VERY bad for an instrument.
Hide glue is more rigid and does less dampening. For this split on the headstock there won't be a noticeable impact from using wood glue, but didn't use it on other parts of the guitar.
Uh, have you ever built a guitar this century?
Man, I've never used hide glue in my guitar builds. It's all PVA, Polyurethane and superglue. I'd use it if I was doing a traditional acoustic build, but it's not necessary.
I don't know where you got that, but the difference is marginal at best. The quantity of glue used is very small, if used correctly, in both cases. The amount of finish is at least an order of magnitude more and affects the sound dampening significantly more. And I don't see companies stating how many layers they put on. Not to mention pore fillers and other stuff.
thanks, that‘s very interesting. I‘ll try it myself the using wood glue (which I have around anyway). Do do u think I should remove the pegs first? or try to glue around them?
Definitely remove the pegs first and get a clamp to hold the pieces together whilst the glue sets.